Back to news
19 Oct 2015 | News

ICIMOD Proposed to Host Web-based Hazard Platform

2 mins Read

70% Complete

 

In Nepal, landslides are one of the most common natural hazards, causing serious economic damage and affecting thousands of vulnerable people every year. The number of landslides can be as many as 12,000 in a year, killing approximately 200 people and causing an estimated economic loss of 700 million rupees per year. The April 2015 earthquake, the proceeding aftershocks, and monsoon rainfall have exacerbated the occurrence of landslides in mountainous terrain of Nepal, which is naturally prone to landslides. Although several governmental and non-governmental agencies have been working on landslide hazard risk assessment and hazard mitigation, a coordinated effort between these different agencies is still needed. One of the key challenges has been the lack of a harmonized methodology regarding national landslide inventorying and hazard assessment, vulnerability, and risk mapping.

On 28 and 29 September 2015, ICIMOD’s Koshi Basin Programme, which is supported by the Australian Government through the Sustainable Development Investment Portfolio for South Asia (SDIP), hosted a workshop in partnership with Department of Soil Conservation and Watershed Management (DSCWM),Ministry of Forests and Soil Conservation, Nepal for key stakeholders and experts working on landslides. The workshop was also supported by UNEP, FAO, IUCN, UNDP and WWF Nepal. The goals of the workshop were to present up-to-date information and various approaches to landslide inventory, hazard mapping, risk assessment, restoration measures, and ecosystem-based mitigation strategies, and to create a platform for data sharing and collaboration. Representatives from the DSCWM, the principal authority mandated with conducting soil conservation and watershed management in Nepal, chaired several of the sessions. Nearly 100 participants from government agencies such as the Department of Water Induced Disaster Prevention (DWIDP), the Department of Roads (DOR), theDepartment of Mines and Geology (DMG), the Department of Meterology and Hydrology, Tribhuvan University, University of Twente, the British Geological Society, and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) also participated in the workshop.

One of the most significant developments to come out of the workshop was an agreement among the various agencies to build an integrative, web-based platform, hosted by ICIMOD, which would act as a national landslide inventory. The platform would promote harmonized methods for data collection and storing, and could be linked with a public reporting system for landslides, using both social media as well as a targeted reporting system for schools and the news media. The participants identified the need for improved application of remote sensing and geospatial tools in creating multiscale inventory and hazard mapping. They also noted that a bottom-up approach to hazard assessment is needed to focus on livelihoods, people at risk, and reconstruction safety.

On landslide treatment and mitigation, there was a consensus that such work should be coordinated across government bodies horizontally and vertically, focusing on appropriate land use planning. In a resolution produced at the conclusion of the workshop, participants recommended that best practices on landslide treatment and mitigation needs to be shared, and new technology needs to be researched for local applicability.

Lastly, the workshop participants proposed establishing a multidisciplinary working group with sub-groups on landslide inventory, landslide hazard assessment, landslide treatment and mitigation, and capacity building. The terms of reference for the working group is expected to be completed by mid-November. The workshop created national and international linkages to develop a knowledge base that would improve decision making. The organizers and participants were both committed to contribute to this initiative to ultimately reduce the impacts of landslides on the lives and livelihoods of people across Nepal.

Stay current

Stay up to date on what’s happening around the HKH with our most recent publications and find out how you can help by subscribing to our mailing list.

Sign Up

Related Contents

Continue exploring this topic

1 Feb 2016 News
Post-earthquake Management in Tibet

The April 2015 earthquake had far reaching impacts in the HKH region. Although the epicentre was north-west of Kathmandu, Nepal, ...

Upgrading Ginger Value Chain

ICIMOD’s Rural Livelihoods and Climate Change Adaptation in the Himalayas (Himalica) pilot project in Myanmar has facilitated linkage between private ...

27 Jul 2018 DFAT Brahmaputra
Synthesizing Knowledge on the Vanishing Springs of the Himalaya

Springs are the main source of water for millions of people in the mid-hills of the HKH and provide multiple ...

8 Apr 2016 Livelihoods
Bees Boost Business for Bhutan’s Farmers

Tshering Wangdi Sherpa was a small farmer living in Darachu, Bhutan who kept a few colonies of honeybees in log ...

Accelerating change for sustainable water management in the HKH

As we join the global community in marking World Water Day with the theme ‘Accelerating Change’, we are yet again ...

Bridging Knowledge Gaps: the Effects of Air Pollution on Human Health

Parth Sarathi Mahapatra, a research analyst with the Atmosphere Initiative at the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), says ...

23 Feb 2015 Atmosphere Initiative
Doctors on front lines for health and climate

Doctors now find themselves on the front lines of two increasingly connected issues: protecting ...

30 Sep 2016 Gender in Koshi
Spring Revival Pilot Project a Success

As a young girl growing up in the hilly Dapcha Kashikhanda municipality, Sushila Adhikari remembers her local pond Daraune Pokhari. ...